Cascais Citadel Palace Museum
Palace · Cascais e Estoril
Church building
The Church of Nossa Senhora da Assunção is the Mother Church of the city of Cascais, in the Lisbon district, of Portugal. Its date of construction is unknown but some internal decoration has been dated as being between 1520 and 1525 and the church is clearly visible in a 1572 engraving showing a view of Cascais from the sea.
History: Nossa Senhora da Assunção is believed to have been constructed on the site of a Visigoth necropolis in the early 16th century. The church still has four painted panels from the first quarter of the 16th century, attributed to the Master of Lourinhã, which were probably part of an altarpiece. A 1572 engraving by Georgius Branius in the work "Civitates Urbius Terrarum" (1593 edition), shows the village of Cascais surrounded by a wall with the church outside the walls and close to the sea. In 1671, it underwent reconstruction, which probably involved the execution of a new altarpiece. In 1673, a painting of the Baby Jesus was done by Josefa de Óbidos for the Capela das Almas (Chapel of the Souls). The restored church was formally inaugurated in 1681. In 1720 the tiles of the sacristy and the nave were painted with scenes from the life of Mary, mother...